Cortex-A72 Running In Snapdragon 620 Scores Impressive Results

Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 810 might have kicked the company right in the gut, but the firm is going to make some substantial changes with its upcoming Snapdragon 800 and Snapdragon 600 series. That being said, the latest benchmarking results of Qualcomm Snapdragon 620 have emerged thanks to GeekBench, and we have to say that the scores are looking quite impressive. Without getting in too many details, let us debrief you on how well the chipset did in the tests.

Snapdragon 620 Features An Octa-Core Processor, With Four Cores Belonging To Cortex-A72

According to the benchmarking results, Snapdragon 620 was present in a device that features 3 GB of RAM, and while the resolution of that particular handset could not be found, the scores obtained are thoroughly impressive. Before we get to the results, Snapdragon 620 features an octa-core processor that comprises of the following:

Quad-core Cortex-A72 at 1.8 GHz

Quad-core Cortex-A53 at 1.2 GHz

In the single core test, the mobile chipset was able to obtain a score of 1513 points, whereas the multi-core test saw the SoC accumulate a total of 4051 points. For comparison purposes, given below are the results of what Snapdragon 810 and Exynos 7420 obtained when they were benchmarked:

Snapdragon 810: 1227 single-core, 4424 multi-core

Exynos 7420: 1486 single-core, 5284 multi-core

Now there is a surprise that you don’t see every day. Even though Snapdragon 620 could not surpass Snapdragon 810 or Exynos 7420 in the multi-core test, the SoC blew away both of them in the single core test, which is highly impressive. We have to say that the primary contributor of the aforementioned score is Cortex-A72, and is considered a welcomed upgrade over Cortex-A57, which was not suitable for devices thanks to its power consumption property.

In addition to the quad-core processor, Snapdragon 620 also features LPDDR3 RAM support, although it would have been better had LPDDR4 RAM support been present. Regardless, we have to say that these results are phenomenal, assuming they turn out to be true. What do you guys think? Has Qualcomm finally learned its lesson? Do tell us your thoughts.